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Handle debt wisely to take the
first baby steps toward retirement
By Lucy
Lazarony Bankrate.com
With
the flick of the graduation cap into the air and the promise of
a new job waiting, the last thing most college graduates want to
mull over is paying for retirement.
They just can't see it. Most can't imagine being
30, let alone 65. And yet many financial choices that twentysomethings
make now will help determine whether they'll be working away in
their twilight years or kicking up their heels and swapping stories
of how things were way back in the 20th century.
Slay the debt dragon
Step one on the financial march is to get a handle on debt. A top
priority is to get rid of as much credit card debt as possible.
The average credit card debt for today's college graduates is $2,748
for undergraduates and $4,778 for graduate students, according to
Nellie
Mae, a student loan provider.
"If you want to be serious about being healthy
financially in later years, that has to be taken out," says Meg
Green, a certified financial planner based in Miami.
Double or triple minimum credit card payments
whenever possible. Plot out a realistic spending plan. Lots of recent
college grads, especially young doctors and young lawyers, are so
sick and tired of living as "poor students" that they spend like
mad in their early- and mid-20s. Much of that spending goes on credit
cards.
This strategy, while filled with plenty of "I've
made it" euphoria, can mean trouble later.
It's just not wise to spend with abandon and
pile up high credit card debt in your 20s, especially for people
who are facing a good 10 years or so of student loan payments. It
only makes that financial hole you're trying to climb out of that
much deeper.
"You'll never survive if you're starting out
in life with a lot of debt and you don't dig yourself out right
away," warns Marilyn Steinmetz, a certified financial planner in
West Hartford, Conn.
Of course, not all debt is negative. Some debt
is necessary to meet goals. A college education and a mortgage,
for example, are worth going into the red for.
"I don't think there's anyone I know who gets
through life all cash," Green says.
Beware the too-big mortgage
Twentysomethings lucky enough to swing a mortgage should not go
overboard with their "dream" home. Make sure those mortgage payments
are manageable each month. Who wants to eat peanut butter and jelly
sandwiches on a card table each night -- even if you do own the
joint? Overwhelming home expenses can eat into all aspects of your
financial life, including long-term goals such as retirement.
"It's a matter of balancing," says David Morganstern,
a certified financial planner at Capital Management Consulting in
Portland, Ore. "You don't want to put everything in so that you're
house poor. People need to budget themselves so that they have enough
cash flow after they've bought the house and fixed it up to save
for retirement."
Begin saving
OK, so you've got a handle on your debt situation. And if you do
buy a house anytime soon, you'll be sure not to let it suck you
dry financially. So far, so good. Now don't forget about saving.
As Green points out, "Debt should not stop you
from socking away even the littlest bit away for retirement."
An easy way to do this is to join your company's
401(k) program.
Most employers allow their employees to sign
up as soon as an initial probationary period ends. An employee can
request that as much as 15 percent be deducted from each paycheck
toward the retirement plan. Many companies will match whatever the
employee contributes, dollar for dollar, up to a certain limit.
If 15 percent is too high, start with 5 percent and gradually work
your way up to the maximum, advise some financial planners.
Scrimping a bit now will pay off in the long
run. Let's say you're a 25-year-old with a job that pays $25,000
a year and a company 401(k) that matches 50 percent of employee
contributions. If you save 6 percent of your salary -- keeping that
percentage level as your salary rises -- and earn 8 percent on that
money, you will end up with $1.1 million by age 65.
But, "Only you can decide what works with your
budget, but the key is to pay something toward retirement, no matter
how small the percentage," says Ron Meier, a professor at the College
for Financial Planning in Greenwood, Colo.
Another realistic way for this age group to
start saving now is to decide on a percentage of each paycheck to
be earmarked for retirement. Arrange to have a certain percentage,
say, 5 percent deducted from your paycheck and automatically deposited
into a savings account even if it's only $25 a month. The current
national average for a MMA is only 1.07 percent, but after 40 years
that adds up to over $15,000. Couple this with 401(k) contributions
that will gradually increase the longer you work, and contributions
made by a spouse, and $15,000 proves to be a hefty hunk of change.
Hand-in-hand strategies
Remember that savings and solid debt management strategies go hand
in hand. One professor suggests adopting a more flexible strategy
for saving, rather than the rigid 20 percent of take-home pay some
planners advise. The "70-20-10" formula breaks savings goals into
bite-sized chunks that are easy to swallow, says Tahira K. Hira,
a professor of family and consumer science at Iowa State University
in Ames.
"Use 70 percent of your take-home pay for regular
purchases, such as groceries, rent or clothing; set aside 20 percent
for purchases that cost large sums of money," Hira says. "Save the
remaining 10 percent for retirement -- and don't touch it."
It's all about finding that balance. Chip away
at debt, sock some money away for savings and still allow yourself
some money for play.
"You've been in college for four years, probably
getting by on the bare necessities, and now you feel it's time to
reward yourself," Hira says, "and that's OK, but try to put retirement
in perspective: 'Will I be able to live the way I want to live when
I'm 65?' "
Insurance to get -- and
not get
Think all this retirement talk boils down to budgeting and saving?
Think again. There's also a thing called life insurance to contend
with.
If you have a spouse, domestic partner or children,
you ought to sign up for life insurance.
An insurance agent, says Randall Guttery, assistant
professor of finance at the University of North Texas, has a legal
obligation to give you straight advice on whether to buy term or
cash-value life insurance (although your decision might affect the
agent's commission), so don't mistrust the agent.
But be a discriminating customer: Seek advice
from more than one agent. Research life insurance over the Internet
and trust your instincts when choosing an agent, advises Harold
Skipper Jr., professor of risk management and insurance at Georgia
State University.
A dangerous assumption
There's another kind of insurance that you might consider buying
to make retirement as smooth as possible: disability income insurance
that replaces your salary or wages if you are disabled before retirement
and can't work. Without such insurance, and without a job, you'll
have trouble saving anything for retirement.
Don't make the mistake, Skipper says, of assuming
that disability benefits from Social Security and your employer
would cover your living expenses should you become totally disabled.
The benefits might replace your income or they might not.
The Social
Security Administration's Web site explains its disability benefits,
and you can call toll-free 1-800-772-1213 to get more information.
But if you're young, unmarried and childless,
here's where all single GenXers out there get a break: You probably
don't need any life insurance.
"When it comes to buying life insurance," says
Skipper, "the underlying question at every age is, 'Will my death
create significant financial hardships for people I care about?'
If the answer to that question is no, either because it wouldn't
create a hardship or you don't care about them, you probably don't
need to buy life insurance."
Michael D. Larson, Holden Lewis and
Michelle Samaad contributed to this story
-- Updated April 30, 2002
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